THE PEOPLE, Plаintiff and Respondent, v. CARLOS FAUSTINOS, Defendant and Appellant.
E082951 (Super.Ct.No. FWV1300823)
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT, DIVISION TWO
Filed 3/13/25
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
Daniel W. Detienne, Judge.
OPINION
David R. Greifinger, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Charles C. Ragland, Senior Assistant Attorney General, A. Natasha Cortina and Liz Olukoya, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Resрondent.
Carlos Faustinos appeals from the trial court‘s order declining to act on his petition for resentencing under
Our holding is consistent with longstanding precedent governing the appealability of orders responding to unauthorized motions invoking section
BACKGROUND
In 2019, Faustinos pled guilty to forcible rape (
In 2023, Faustinos petitioned for resentencing with a motion thаt cited and discussed several recent ameliorative sentencing laws, though it did not discuss the facts of Faustinos‘s case, nor did it apply the laws to them. The court took no action, stating it “[did] not have jurisdiction to consider [the] motion.”
ANALYSIS
Faustinos argues that the trial court erred in issuing its order taking no action on his request for resentencing under section 1172.1. We dismiss this appeal because the trial court‘s order is not appealable.
The right to appeal is determined by statute. (People v. Mazurette (2001) 24 Cal.4th 789, 792.) The Penal Code provides that an order after a judgment in a criminal case is appealable if it affects “the substantial rights of the party.” (
I. Resentencing Under Section 1172.1
A trial court generally loses resentencing jurisdiction once execution of the sentence has begun. (People v. E.M. (2022) 85 Cal.App.5th 1075, 1082 (E.M.).) Because of this “rule precluding postjudgment motions,” a trial court generally lacks jurisdiction to hear one unless “the Legislature has expressly authorized” the motion. (People v. Picklesimer (2010) 48 Cal.4th 330, 337 & fn.2 (Picklesimer).)
Before 2022, section 1170, subdivision (d), allowed a court to recall a sentence and resentence the defendant at any time upon a request from the Secretary of California‘s Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation or certain other government officials. (People v. Frazier (2020) 55 Cal.App.5th 858, 863.) The request served as an invitation to the court to exercise equitable jurisdiction, and section 1170, subdivision (d), furnished that jurisdiction. (E.M., supra, 85 Cal.App.5th at p. 1082.) The court had “broad discretion” in deciding whether to resentence. (Ibid.) A trial court, however, could recall the sentence on its own motion only within 120 days of the defendant‘s commitment. (Id. at p. 1082.)
Effective January 1, 2022, the Legislature amended the resentencing provision and placed it in section 1172.1.2 The amendments were intended to clarify “procedural requiremеnts” and created a presumption in favor of resentencing once a request was filed. (People v. McMurray (2022) 76 Cal.App.5th 1035, 1038 (McMurray); see
Effective January 1, 2024, the Legislature amended section 1172.1 to expand the court‘s ability to recall and resentence a defendant on its own motion. (See Assembly Bill No. 600 (2023-2024 Reg. Sess.; Stats. 2023, ch. 446, § 2.) Now, a court still may recall a sentence on its own motion within 120 days of commitment for any reason “rationally related to lawful sentencing.” (Dix v. Superior Court (1991) 53 Cal.3d 442, 456.)
Section 1172.1 permits a trial court to apply changes in law even where the Legislature has not made a change retroactive. Yet the law does not allow a court to recall-and-resentence where the applicable sentencing laws have not “changed” since the last sentencing. (
Though the court can act on its own motion, defendants may not petition under section 1172.1. As the law states, a court, the Secretary of the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, the Board of Parole Hearings, a сounty correctional administrator, a district attorney, or the Attorney General may recommend or otherwise seek resentencing under section 1172.1. The statute makes express that the defendant has no right to petition: “A defendant is not entitled to file a petition seeking relief from the court under this section.” (
II. Under Longstanding Precedent, an Order on a Defendant‘s Section 1172.1 Petition is Non-Appealable
For decades, it has been established in the Court of Appeal that a defendant‘s appeal from a petition denying their motion under former section 1170, subdivision (d)(1), is “not appealable as an order affecting the substantial rights of the party . . . because the defendant has no right tо request such an order in the first instance.” (People v. Pritchett (1993) 20 Cal.App.4th 190, 194; e.g., People v. Magana (2021) 63 Cal.App.5th 1120, 1127-1128; People v. Hernandez (2019) 34 Cal.App.5th 323, 326; People v. Chamizo (2019) 32 Cal.App.5th 696, 701; People v. Chlad (1992) 6 Cal.App.4th 1719, 1724-1725.) This same reasoning
III. The 2024 Amendment to Section 1172.1 Does Not Change the Non-Appealability of Orders Made on a Defendant‘s Motion
Faustinos argues that the 2024 amendments to section 1172.1 make appealable the order following his unаuthorized petition, as they grant the trial court discretion to initiate a resentencing on its own motion. We disagree. When a court declines to act on a defendant‘s petition, it affects no substantial right, as a defendant‘s request carries neither a right to a resentencing nor an obligation for the court to consider initiating one.
Consider four types of actions a court might take in declining to аct on a defendant‘s section 1172.1 petition.
First, section 1172.1, subdivision (c), states that the court need not respond if the defendant petitions. If the court, acting consistently with the statute, never issues an order on a defendant‘s petition, there is no appealable order.
Second, a trial court could respond to an unauthorized petition with a simple order stating the defendant is not entitled to рetition, invoking section 1172.1, subdivision (c). We think a response is advisable, as silence may leave the defendant unsure if the petition was received. It cannot be, however, that such an order affects the defendant‘s substantial rights. “If the defendant has no right to a decision, the trial court‘s choice not to make one does not deprive the defendant of any right, much less a substantial one.” (Hodge, supra, 107 Cal.App.5th аt p. 996.) It is not an appealable order.
Third, the court could go beyond its obligation and state that it is not going to act on its own motion, though it need not address that matter. While the court can “initiate[]” a recall-and-resentencing “on its own motion” (
Fourth, a court sometimes could respond to the defendant‘s petition by noting, correctly, that it lacks jurisdiction to act on its own section 1172.1 motion. Beyond 120 days from the defendant‘s commitment, a trial court may act only if “the applicable sentencing laws at the time of original sentencing are subsequently changed by new statutory authority or case law.” (
In this case, in fact, the trial court may have lacked jurisdiction to act on its own motion. The defendant was sentenced pursuant to a plea agreement to a term of 16 years for committing rape by force. His sentence was simply eight years for that offense, doubled due to a prior “strike” offense. No enhancements were imposed. In his appellate briefing and oral argument, defendant asserted no way that the sentencing laws applicable to him have changed since his sentencing. He has asserted no basis for trial court jurisdiction to initiate a section 1172.1 resentencing on its own.
Here, then, the “nature of the claim and the court‘s ruling thereto” are such that they do not affect a defendant‘s substantial rights. (Teal, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 600.) We conclude that there is no appellate jurisdiction over an order declining to act on a defendant‘s unauthorized section 1172.1 petition, even though a court may initiate a resentencing on its own motion.
IV. Chatman and a Trial Court‘s Mistaken View of Its Own Discretion
In Chatman, supra, 108 Cal.App.5th at p. 659, unlike here, the defendant asserted “several applicable sentencing laws that applied during his original sentencing have chаnged . . . [so] the court necessarily had jurisdiction to resentence defendant on its own motion.” Chatman correctly observed that the trial court could resentence him on its own motion, though the defendant was not entitled to file the petition. (Id. at p. 659.) Chatman concluded that, because the court “chose to act” by issuing an order stating that it “lacked jurisdiction to resentence,” the order was appealablе. (Id. at p. 659.)
We do not think that a court‘s phrasing of an order can convert a non-appealable order into an appealable one. Chatman wrongly viewed Loper, supra, 60 Cal.4th 1155, as supporting its view. Loper
Chatman‘s conclusion that the order was appealable turns on its content; that is, that the court‘s order “could be based upon on the mistaken belief that the court lacked jurisdiction to rеsentence.” (Chatman, supra, 108 Cal.App.5th at p. 662.) If an order on a defendant‘s section 1172.1 petition did not reflect such a mistaken belief, then Chatman apparently would find the order non-appealable. Chatman appears to hold that an otherwise unappealable order becomes appealable when a court alludes to a mistaken view of its jurisdiction.
Factually, this case differs from Chatman in two ways. Here, the trial court stated that it lacked jurisdiction to consider the defendant‘s motion. That is correct. The trial court‘s statement nеed not be read as suggesting that it believed it lacked jurisdiction to act on its own motion. Secondly, unlike in Chatman, the trial court here appears to have lacked its own motion jurisdiction. A court can act on its own motion under section 1172.1 only if the applicable laws changed since the sentencing. Faustinos did not (and does not) assert that the laws applicable to him have changed since his sеntencing. If they did not change, the trial court has no jurisdiction to act on its own motion.
But even assuming the trial court erroneously stated, in response to Faustinos‘s unauthorized petition, that it lacks authority to act on its own motion, we do not think that would convert a non-appealable order to an appealable one. People v. Gallardo (2000) 77 Cal.App.4th 971, 983-984 (Gallardo), provides instructive reasoning. There, a defendant filed an unsucсessful post-judgment motion that he admittedly was unauthorized to file and could not appeal. But he claimed that, in denying, the trial court nevertheless “failed to recognize its power to dismiss” charges it had stayed. (Id. at p. 983.) He argued that “the reasons given by the sentencing judge for denying a hearing—essentially, that he did not have the power to grant the relief which would be requested at the hearing—were not рroper reasons for denying a hearing.” (Id. at p. 984.) In rejecting the claim, the Court of Appeal assumed that the trial court misunderstood its own power. (Id. at p. 985, fn. 8.) Even so, the trial court‘s statements did not make a non-appealable order appealable because “appealability depends upon the nature of the decision made, not the court‘s justification for its ruling.” (Id. at p. 985.)
As in Gallardo, we do not think that the court can transform a non-appealable order (stating that it would not act on an unauthorized motion) into an appealable one by addressing a matter that it needed not address (its jurisdiction to act on its own), even if it was wrong about that matter.
Still, a defendant has a remedy if a trial court wrongly declares that it lacks jurisdiction to act on its own motion under section 1172.1. That
Finally, Chatman wrongly reads People v. Carmony (2004) 33 Cal.4th 367 (Carmony) as supporting its view that a trial court‘s mistake about its own discretion creates an appealable post-judgment order. Chatman saw “no apparent reason” to refrain from extending Carmony to a defendant‘s section 1172.1 motion. (Chatman, supra, 108 Cal.App.5th at p. 661.) Carmony, though, did not concern appellate jurisdiction.
Carmony arose in a direct appeal from a conviction and sentence. (Carmony, supra, 33 Cal.4th at p. 373.) There is always jurisdiction for such an appeal. (
In contrast, whether the trial court determination here creates jurisdiction for a post-judgment appeal presents the different question of whether the defendant‘s substantial rights are affected by the category of order that the trial court has issued. (See
For the reasons provided, there is no appealable order, and we dismiss the appeal.
DISPOSITION
We dismiss the appeal.
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
RAPHAEL J.
We concur:
McKINSTER Acting P. J.
CODRINGTON J.
